I still use film and have quite a few film cameras, mostly for black & white. The Canon AE-1 wouldn't be my first choice if I was buying my first one, although they are perfectly decent film cameras.
I like the OM series of Olympus cameras and the Pentax M/K series (the K1000 is decent if you can find one at a reasonable price - they are stupidly overpriced most of the time).
I have three of these too, which are awesome, compact cameras as used by David Bailey
Only thing now is processessing is ?8-10 a pop, which makes it quite expensive if you're shooting a lot of film.
If you want to go Nikon Pro bodies, the F5 can be had dirt cheap now and it's a tank of a camera that will live forever, even if you drag it from the back of a tractor through the mud - serious overkill for most stuff though:
That Olympus Trip looks very tidy. I guess I was just kinda looking at the Canon as my current camera is a Canon. The AE-1 is very pretty though, but so is the Pentax you posted above.
Definitely got me thinking though, thanks for the suggestions.
Also use a film camera every now and then. I picked up a lovely Pentax Spotmatic which is pretty much the same age as me. As Marty said, it's not cheap though. The camera and 2 lenses cost me around ?70, and processing is quite expensive per roll, plus I seem to need a battery for the light meter every several months. I had to get the camera repaired a while ago which was another ?50.
All that said, I feel much more ownership of the film photos than I do of anything digital. I love the slower process of shooting film too.
Few samples plus the camera itself - must get another roll in that soon actually..
The Pentax Spotmatic has an always on light meter - you might find it drains less if you put a lens cap on the camera. Great thing about the Olympus Trip 35 is that it doesn't need any batteries.
It's usually an option to scan the negatives as they are developed, price depends on resolution of the scan usually. The default option is pretty poor tbh and are only about 2MP - you might be better off getting a film scanner and doing it yourself if you start using a lot of film.
Home processing of B&W film is pretty easy and only requires fairly basic kit; I still have all the chems and kit to do it, although the borrowed enlarger I had for prints went back to its rightful owner a while back.
Haven't been around for a while but just checked out some of the pictures on the last few pages and it makes me sick how talented some of you guys are! Keep up the great work.
Hey folks, it's been a while You guys have been posting some lovely shots, been nice to flick through the last few months worth of shots! I've been really busy for the past few years so not had much chance to get out with the camera but hoping to turn that around now. Here are a few from the past few weeks.
Hey folks, it's been a while You guys have been posting some lovely shots, been nice to flick through the last few months worth of shots! I've been really busy for the past few years so not had much chance to get out with the camera but hoping to turn that around now. Here are a few from the past few weeks.
Comment